This release is part of the Office's ongoing project, in partnership with the University
of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center, to digitize the entire Foreign Relations series.
These volumes cover events that took place between 1945 and 1951 and include documents on
the conferences at Malta and Yalta in 1945.

A unique contribution to the series, this 1865 volume embodied the grief and shattered hopes of foreign
governments and common people, both at home and abroad, upon learning of President Abraham
Lincoln’s assassination on April 14, 1865.

This release is part of the Office's ongoing project, in partnership with
the University of Wisconsin Digital Collections Center, to digitize the entire Foreign
Relations series. These volumes cover events that took place between 1948 and 1951 and were
originally published in print between 1973 and 1998.

To mark the centenary of the First World War, the Office of the Historian and U.S. Embassy France have carried out a study into the role of the U.S. diplomatic corps stationed in France during 1914–1918.

This compilation focuses on the creation and overseas work of the Committee on Public
Information (CPI). The CPI’s foreign work constituted a sustained effort to educate a foreign
public about the United States, and, in particular, its role in the war effort.

This volume documents the intellectual foundations of the Carter administration’s
foreign policy. The documentation seeks to
illustrate the collective mindset of administration officials on foreign policy
issues in the broadest sense.

This volume documents U.S. policy toward North Africa from 1973 until 1976, as the Nixon
and Ford administrations sought to broker settlements to conflicts in the Middle East and to
limit Soviet exploitation of tensions in the region.

This volume documents U.S. policy toward Chile from January 1969 to September 24,
1973, when the Nixon administration announced its extension of diplomatic recognition to the
military junta under General Augusto Pinochet.